Daily Mail

Council where parking profit went up 65% in only a year

- By James Salmon Transport Editor

PROFITS from council parking charges have soared by up to two-thirds in a year, according to a report.

Figures show how town halls outside of London have generated millions by increasing the costs of on-street parking, car parks and parking permits.

The biggest rise was seen in Medway, Kent, where parking profits jumped 65 per cent from £3.1million in 2016/17 to £5million last year.

In Southampto­n, parking profits soared 62 per cent from £4.2million to £6.8million. They rose more than 20 per cent in Manchester and Bournemout­h and by almost a quarter in Bath and North East Somerset. Outside the capital Brighton and Hove racked up the biggest surplus of £23.4million – up 10 per cent from £ 21.1million, according to figures looked at by website click4reg.

In total, councils across England, including London, generated £1.6billion in parking revenues – of which a record £867million was profit.

However, councils insist all the money has to be ploughed back into local transport, and some say they have increased fees to help tackle congestion and reduce pollution.

But the dramatic increase in revenues has fuelled concerns they are exploiting motorists to generate extra revenues and shore up partowns lous finances. A recent Daily Mail investigat­ion revealed parking fees are set to rise again from next week. Hampshire, Nottingham, Reading, Cambridge, Brighton and Exeter all plan big increases.

Steve Gooding, of the RAC Foundation, said: ‘ These large leaps in profit will astonish many motorists. Local authority parking has become big business. The turnover and profit that many councils are seeing would be the envy of many high street retailers.

‘It is exactly these struggling firms that councils must ensure they are not killing off by pricing drivers out of and cities.’ As well as charging more for car parks, many councils are set to raise the cost of residentia­l permits. And shoppers and churchgoer­s will be hit by the end of cheaper Sunday parking in some areas.

Analysis by the Daily Mail showed residentia­l parking charges will soar by as much as 230 per cent across Hampshire from April.

Northampto­n council is trebling evening car park charges from £1 an hour to £3 on weekdays, with the cost of two hours’ parking rising from £2.40 to a flat fee of £4 for parking between three and five hours. Councillor Martin Tett, of the Local Government Associatio­n, said: ‘Any income raised through on- street parking charges and parking fines is spent on running parking services and any surplus is only spent on essential transport projects, such as tackling our national roads repair backlog and other local transport projects.

‘Councils are on the side of motorists and shoppers when setting parking policies, which aim to make sure there are spaces available for residents, high streets are kept vibrant and traffic is kept moving.’

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